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Enlightenment was in Poland a time of reform and reaction;
of dwindling political power of the state and of one of Europe's
earliest democratic constitutions; of a gradual destruction of the
country by its neighbors and of spectacular advances in education and
industry. The poetry of the age reflected its main element, that of
Reason, with classicism as its most pervading feature.
It is perhaps ironic that the most prominent representative of this
era, Ignacy
Krasicki (1735-1801), was an Archbishop of the Roman Catholic
Church. The 'freethinking prelate,' as he was often called, is best
known for his parables and satires, written in simple language and
elegant verse, and attacking without respite the vices of his
countrymen.
Stanislaw
Trembecki (ca. 1740-1812) was a much less serious personage:
spendthrift, duelist, courtier, libertine; gifted poet careless of his
talent; translator of Voltaire. The staid Kajetan
Kozmian (1771-1856) is a classicist through and through, who
survived the Sturm und Drang of his younger Romantic rivals.
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